Never has there been a more critical—or a more challenging—time for deliberate and strategic career planning. In times of economic uncertainty, possibly the best investment you can make is in your education, and in the professional credentials that can lay the groundwork for your future.

The Chicago School's Financial Aid Office is committed to helping identify the opportunities, understand the options, and make the choices that are right for you.

While we feel certain that your degree will be worth every penny you spend, both in terms of professional satisfaction and increased income, we want you to be prepared. Contact us, and let us help.

Phone Consultations: Our financial aid counselors are available to answer questions for both new and continuing students, to explore both the pros and cons of various financial aid options, and to help you build the most appropriate plan for you. You may contact Financial Aid by calling 800.684.2890.

Informational Workshops: Our financial aid staff hosts regular seminars or webinars on topics such as budgeting, loans and scholarships, and even hands-on workshops at which our staff will help you complete your FAFSA paperwork to apply for federal student loans.

TCSPP has teamed up with SALT, a new program that helps our students manage their money and student loans. Learn more here.

Most students rely on a combination of financial aid to finance their graduate degrees, such as:

The Chicago School of Professional Psychology's Financial Aid department is dedicated to the highest standards of professional conduct, and therefore has adopted and adheres to theguidelines of ethical conductpreferred by the National Association of Student Financial Aid Administrators (NASFAA). As members of NASFAA, The Chicago School has permission to make such an adoption.

Dr. Todd DuBose

“The experience of hearing a loved one has died is...not only horrifying; the finality and irreversibility of the event has no prior framework with which to make sense of it. And making sense is our way of clawing at the walls as we fall into what feels like oblivion.”-Dr. Todd DuBose, Assistant Professor, Clinical Psychology

DuBose intruder

Dr. Breeda McGrath

“A parent who is dealing with job loss may be using all of his cognitive resources just to cope, and has very little left over for the kids. And while kids don’t understand all of it, they...feel a sense of loss.”-Dr. Breeda McGrath, Chair, Online International Psychology Program

Dr. Breeda McGrath

Making a Difference Around the Globe

Through the Chicago School's Global Hope Initiative, students have gained powerful international training experience while helping children who were impacted by the Rwandan genocide. Click here to watch a brief trailer from a new documentary about their work, or watch the full documentary here.